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Show til nai.K oi- FAMOUS DOCTOR'S a cjapa? mj - . PRESCRIPTION. The manufacture cf fine jewelry has been one of our principal special ties for more than forty years. W have always atoad at t'.ie head i this line and today use more mer. more machinery and more materi.M than any similar p:ant with'n some hundreds of mi'es. Take the time and iit our shep. We will show you haw we m.ike good jewelry. 1 o o y LAKC c SALT I2ARRY J. nOZililZOU The WhiPi pr: ti 'J 11 i:: iu.- iut- rwnlly, j Ju.eni.s a Sail Like City t r llii'-ii- l i; ....is of Iiovm. ii 12 y .irs of irul la ing i f?i- tin - In i ' I: liia li n !'iai:r ! lti-;- r Pi t'iioiil c..i uliiil ii pivviuiis (.i to ii i hav- il Amoiu; llu nro"i'ii i.r was tin' billowing: 'Naim l.u: zoui-Oiii promising y m ih of years, who had iiil .! ilie two wrulc, "TIuti- - aro Iwu gmi' :i, inaiu'iiiliie and feiinniiii'. Tin IW1 l : p. iM'e il culln In l i Hie li iiiinini' Is eitlwr to. rid or frigid." -- null-Jifi- Opportunity. Recognising H yon GenOiMiiily ('ul'i r- f if r u.will want suiiii' i:i"..' i ms now. AleaitiiT of Si'ioid i ml I iliial; Dot. All our ju "liii, i..v ii!:i'li and are in l In1 liiimli of I i! t inl.;r u, d: or (v.u. CieniUiismly Callti Vn, but your geii;i':idilrH are old fttrtl ini'll, on know. Wo ini run n inn u s riliinm liiriii prejsirid, bur iih'ssi :j il now, wiili llet norlu iole .l.i!iii.v ni.ir..iil whin in. 1W: Will lie In a d.iy I ri.-i- Mow lo.iiiy Itioiisnud you t. link you cun usi'? 'J'lllmne. il ll. diHeuvi i" coiii s il.i MlU-ng- lToGMIOS9 I7EATM0E9 OF GamUBHESDAILo V tt. 'l'i j ... ffyiH Tl l.- '1! e i iv..y tii. in f iy iti :s v.i'h :r- - m ( i'i: 1 1 I I.i fr y 'i : -- t tie wi y of ) !!: r j.ii('if. p.-r- : t.f il.u t t'-r- the are trikinFly ; of o .1 With which Is 1 1!.- 1 ;;t for the '" The Heartless Girl. n nt I Ma'tu luwn, made one Ions;, lingi ii, lovelorn plea as ilio Must eaU' to hU lady love to chan so her mind and ay Yes." He told her (hat If lnatry him he'd got s rope and hang hinisi If right in front of her A few days ago a young i 'f Jioiie. tlie tpcetator -t through con- v.d-k'program. ol e:u!y Bt. Ixiuis Aiitcrlcan epic woi-ias a frontier f Reversing a Platitude. "Ilavo you ever imllced," began tho bald Koullemun who liked to entertain the people gathered In his comer of the hotel plaza, "that little men Invariably inurry largo women? the It nnv be so. murmured tnlldeyed fellow guest, but I had always supposed that it was the other way aiioul t.ui the huc wu:... married the small man." Youth's !. i.i s ' ' JpfrARIiM Itted OF 5T9 EASY l - u-.- l : n d i i P-- t::ui'-iortiitlo- 1 il-.- r Did you ever hoar of worse than a man who who Fi.iukcrt in the house? Air. Yes. A smoking lamp. Ask me ..:.i'llicr! Airs. tti-h'- s iiii-niT- i ; ORhU-- WrVOHT KraniP. Laclede landed at tlie foot of what Is now Market strict. rr$an!zcd the village and resided thfre for 1 years. He named the new site St. Louis in honor of Iinls XV., tho reign!"!? sove-eig- n of Franrc. Tl-territory was traee-forroto France Spain by secret treaty in by 1702. but It was not ununinred in the new village until October, 17M. In Mi3 Spain retroceded the sovereignty to France and on April 80, 1PC3, France sold all the territory west of the Mississippi river, known as the Louisiana purchase, to the Vniteil Slates fur ?l."i.0dO.0itn, Napoleon This recession of territory strengthens forever the power of the United States." With less than a thousand Inhabitants when the whole country had not quite seven and a quarter million in 1$U9, St. Louis emerged from the era of the keelboat afld pirogue to pioneer the steamboat on western rivers. Loading Its first 1 s s d . Ua K'jSlCJgiSpSSl cf if., Ta-cii- .;.' CARRYING WIGHT AEROPLMit iuvl-tiitio- L.-- VfJX' 'aitv'-- , i '' 'V' rtjs - Ttt TVIffOING 41 VX7SS j . .a or . BvsptcM. muti&atoH PM A : OLIVE. STREET. ST. LOUIS tOO YEARS AGO (I .? V'U In point of fact in St. Louis it is only a matter of the third generation keelboat between mind. In and aeroplane. the first airship on record as crossing the Mississippi river crossed it at St. Loula during the international contests of that year. It ia something to remember now as part of the record to which belongs the history of the first locomotive crossing the Mississippi at St. Ixiuis in 18ii2 to complete the work of the St. Louis argonauts of 1849, crossing to the Pacific in their prairie schooners. If we ruppose aeroand airships planes in the air circling above the St. Louis keelboat landing of a hundred years ago we may imagine, if we can, how they appear whose to the men in grandfathers not only navigated the riverboata keelbo&tx. but liiy flat behind the goods the wore loaded with while they were being shot at by Indiana along the banks. It Is almost if not quite aa hard now to imagine what the world meant before the age of steam as it is lo think out what will be its meaning in the are of the perfected airship and aeroplane. Every contrp.st possible In the St. Louts eenten'nl week of pageants is a ehallenge to look backward and forward in the atumpt to find out wT-i- t a hundred years already mean, aa the first ruccess in the attempt to find what it is to menn shortly, for this generation and for the grandchildren of this generation in 2009. The makera of the eentencial week program were keenly alive to the opportunities for spectacular effect suggested by the most striking events of the world's progress. Ti.e aeronautic event suvh as balloon races, aeroplane and diri-gi,'-l' bnlloon contests, nnggest the iuture possibilities uf transpcrtalion in coatrnrt with those of jf.'i. For coinp.v ris'-with nutomoV.lcs and neroi!:': .m the bateau of Laclede's day, with its stiiini y r ;M, its rrrdtdle and its sweeps, is aa education. .1 feature of (he water pageant. wh!ch includes of nil the kinds which now ply the waters uf the Mississippi. The Veiled l'ropliet'a paveaut. unique and picturesque, in another feature wT.k'.i i full of romantic interest. The educational parade, the parade representing 3,000 of St. taut' ind'isirios. the procession of a thousand mayors and the other events which find a place on the program all suggest thnt as a great week for St. tauls its rentennlal week Is still greater, as it belongs to a hundred years of -making for the vcr.Mntntal United States. The city of SL Ixiuis was founded by lierre Leclede Llgtiest in 1704. Tho territory west of ths Mississippi river was then in possession of 1907 'XfK? Complimentary. Tom That is Miss Ryno, the ho wns born. do you belrers. know, wlih a silver spoon In her mouth. looks as If it might Dirk Sh tin vo been a soup lud'e. OLIV STREET TODAY fire-place.- " t still had his explorer. Wllllntn that Is not very hard to rom .Hark, to stand forcompanion the plrit of the American and edv. Put how on earth did you lo It, French "makers of destiny" who tlui' : bt little child? unmore of starting a thousand miles into I pounded It with father's watch. known west from St. Louis than the avi i.iyc St. Success. Louisan now thinks of starting tor the Pacific coast In a sleeping car. Ambiguous. From a village of 9u0 Inhabitants to the fourth During the recent war maneuvers a city in the I'nlted States,, with a pcpi'l'iilon of private not long narried receive! a of a million, is a .uiderful lct'er from his wife, In which she achievement, but it sinks Into InsigniA-- a' :v when wskrd: "Do you ever think of me, with the plant strides of the i ..st cendear?" tury In the world of science, coinn. rce. toe arts To whlih he is said to have replied: and every field of endeavor which makcB for a 1 think 'if you every day at meals, hir her und bell or civilization. It It a severe strain on the imagination to atdarling. The rooking Is horrible. Motion Transcript. tempt to bridge over the gap between the meanp crowing the Mississippi river ing of an Chunes, But Not Chestnuts. at St. Louis this year and what the ancient of lSi'0 meant, us they landed at the foot Wife: "What Had of seats did you of ?" for musical Walnut the Bind., where tho town was founded in comedy get llab: Near enough to hear the 1704 by the pioneers who had paddled and their bateaux painfully up the river from music, and far enough back not to bear the Jokes." Iiasion Transcript. l.ew Orleans under Larlede as he advanced In the bold attempt to control tie fur trade of half The Touch of Fortune. a continent with liis handful of men. The keelboat then was no more out of data "What do you think, my dear. Bnrh luck! We leave for Tarls In an than the airship is now. It was the best modern boat In 1809 which could be equlpprd by the capihour. tal of St Louis, of New Orleans or of Dilludel-pbiReally!" llerause of it Philadelphia and St. Louis Yes. wrfre going to Pasteurs. My husband has just been bitten by s commanded the east and west movement of business as that north and south was conuiunded by mad dog." Ron Ylvant. New Orleans and SL Louis, as soon as their first fleets of keelboat were regularly organized. It Opulence. la What your Idea of happiness?" helped to muke great history, even if t did have To be able to spend my own to be pullrd up stream by a rope dragged by men on the hank. money Just as if I were going to turn This distance In point of change in the way Is an expense account when I got hinge are dons la almost impassable for the tome. .YSell, H-- e three-quarte- air.-kt- keel-boa- ts enr-dellc- d a. bistory- t? "end Children to Europe. pe wait so long before ii.cir children to Europe that the little ones are humiliated by others who have already been lliore. Every parent will be careful not to subject his eliildren io this evident injustice; at tlie same time all unseemly hurry ia to bo avoided. Some argue that as anon as a child cun walk well and speak a few necessary French words, he should bo next to a placed in n private bath, and sent to Paris. Others feel that he must naturally lose much at this age, and tlmt the proper time is between fire and six, when as an American he has reached his When Some i maturity. Probably the ideal age la about four. At four a child can easily do England, France and Italy, and get home la time for the first night at the opera. Judges Library. And There Are Others.' The cook had been called away to i sick sister, and so the newly wed mil tress of the house undertook, with thi aid of the maid, to get the Sunda; luncheon. The little maid, who hai been struggling in the kitchen with i coffee mill that would not work, con (eased that she had forgotten to was! the lettuce. Well, never mind. Pearl. Co oi with the coffee and Ill do it said th considerate mistress. Where do the; keep the soap? wc nvrnnt by cl &toddam .;4 Ht'ijpcik au tiling tliou-SHtu- it-- (Companion. Breaking the News. Marion, who had been taught to reto port her uiisdeeds promplly. her mrthcr one day, sobbing penitently. Mother 1 broke a brlrk In the frfOYSl ..- n it is i. ii piose. !h made hi :lm lirVt li.iir of tin " ' i y of ihii Ynio il t'uies In the ii, t Iiti.iil i oriltio-iii.'I'ornnil h.'itr. I:j j ii neir id-.iii.u'es :,o i:u tin- g.i nt rouies of steam r and 1r;ins, chi.'tilt a lii.vun ihi.-- ;io Ci.mili uiid ili t':.: ri! ,n' ilnt I'.it water routes the Vi:--j i ml the lhu l ie. It finiii the hi ; tl v. : . .a of tlu (i).:n !u tie; ii.omti or tbu JiifO'irl and of the ile-uibetween Hlllints, ip. nii.g If.e ?'r.!l wntr iiiHi' i'Ioii she Ohio river the Ohio mill I he lj per Ms.-I.-i- i;. i mi, Mi,.: i. ,ni, tluti'h mi nt Ii rf lint Hieeiii. ipni vus penetrated by Kvtry fclutn now on teup nm! of the Vi. Its lii!L in-of li:i!e. The whole west piiiiiei ri, eslntili, iiliie the first ills in is Ink with Ft. lu.itliig MU g:iat event, because in. ivi.st the pioneers fouiioiiig ti.e I'.rst Lii-.i- t city of the truis-.Viirn b' Minings now explain'd in iiiuile tl.e Mid in i.ituul of other wcHt.r.i i r.m-iof otl:i r (nwiis, w ! it'll. If they are not alnm y ;,t. i k not iimltily iiii.iii t ill u 'li .iis of o. The their to a tlmi'Mie il i.avnrs of A tin ri i , n cile-to partii ii'iiii In the fi ..ti.il i' S sliows that Bt. hmlii fully aiipreeiutes its pusiiion as ti c plon.-ei lly Ilf I hi) Rl'i iit West. As tli. ri- - sere le.-- than 200 houses, anil biirns, in tho St. Tauiis whieli iacor-I- " outiuui: Tilt id in l.suli, it could not have had mueli mer ill! p iijeo. Ti.e mwii was already tho chief sent of tin- - wi'MiTn 1'tir trade, with its trading iiiiniis piislied to ll:e hi . ilnateib of the Arknosas and far luwarda the soi.ri i s of the .Missouri ami tie Yellow Hum-lining business wholly by liarter, with almost i.i; money in hand, iu sight or in circiil.i-- t mu, with ri reprisi-iilei- l almost wholly by i be spirit of jis OOit people; with tin; ax and ride and lilm ivimiitli's i b ilge os its impleiueuis, with t!.i! iart. the keelboal and canoe us its .r.i importation faeililios, the little town, when It i.'.ioniorated, already looked on ils work as that uf opening up the l uited States of the future to tlie Uoclty mountains and beyond them to the la llsO'j U had lost Merlweatber but , . Oh, pleaiie dont do that, Joe, dear," he said, with much feeling; "yon know fill her doesn't want you hanging around here." So ho dldut ban;; around then, of any more. Anatomical Location. MrAIurf met Deader, the lawyer, Did long u;n. 'Ah," said he. "you're Just I lie man I have been looking for a week. I went over to your office, but found you'd moved." "Yes, I'm a block around the corner A dentist has now," said Pleader. my old plueo." "Re?" ventured McMurf; "then arter this when we want our teeth pulled we'll have to go whore wc used to gol our legs pulled." M&k t'-- p. tin Ji: '.Ii. n il.u v. :rk of tl.e p i fill (.: i e t ft. I !u tli t P : .is progress e I !:i I', o 1 iii:i! :i r. i rar pi uflu-- 'u iiiliJ J:ii:!o :i:!SW. ,'rt gui;;'lii!is. A i Zciies. :.i:.-i- '! Its I i wi ri AT LAW fjds Cuildins, 5 f Ci.-w- V.'f'UTY ATTORNEY 394-30- V ir, PASHMS o o MKDTTUMEKSGMf HJSIJ3IPPI PIVR RL30AT Iff J&09 steamboat in 1817, it had more than doubled Us population of 1810 in 1820. From 4,000 in 182), two decades of steamboating gave it 16,409 in 1840. About that time it began ita great transcontinental work with the prairie schooner, reinforcing the steamboat in ovpi'.:.nd transit. With the transcontinental our! nii I movement, to Oregon as well as California, growirx, in 18r0 it had 77,860 people and was beginning it work aa the first pioneer of railroads to the Pacific. After bringing the first locomotive west of the Mississippi in 18ii2, it more than doubled its population in that decade, reaching 16r.ii87 hi 1860. With tlie foundations of the states now w ivt of the river, already laid along its first trade routes in 1860, it advanced in the next two decades to ,150,552 people. Chicago was pasting it in population then, without being able to take from it its historical place aa the first great city of the west, the pioneer and founder of the west of the present. Since 1889 it has doubled its population once more, advancing from 250,000 to over 700,000. At its present rate of increase, responsive to that of the Mississippi valley, SL Louis ia doubling business in a little over 10 years. Its bank clearings increased from $292,000,000 in 1869 to $3,074,000,000 in 1908. Its tonnage of merchandise received and forwarded waa 20,162,000 tons lor the first six months of tbis year. Ita bank resources reported June 23. 1909, at $385,881,000, more than double the total of the tenth year hack. Such figures illustrate much more than local progress. before they They are become local, in the sense that the people of the whole area between the Allegheny and Rocky mountains are now exerting new energies and utilizing new forces of growth, unforeseen even n.v late aa 10 years ago. As the percentages of this growth are of course greatest west of the Mississippi river, St. Louis has almost "made Itself over in 15 years in growing up to the new growth of the country. Since it began work for the world's fair, ceiihrntir.g the Louisiana purchase. It hai learned to look hack on itself in the Inst decade of the nineteenth century sa "old St. Louis." In looking back to the older St. Louis of 1809, it can boast that as a frontier outpost it led the progress of the continental Inlted Slates. In looking forward, in its centennial year, it can see that the greatest results of the history it has mads are only the beginnings of greater results, which belong to the immediate future of the continental United States, whose progress makes the frontier town ol 1SU9 the mldcontluental city of 1909. Conclusive. Mother Tommy, why dont yo play with Frank any more? I thougt you were such good chums. Tommy We was, but hes a moll; coddle! He paid to get Inter the ball grounds. Instant Relief for All Eyes, that nr: irritaled froin dust, heat, nin or wind,' PI-- r J T S EY K SALVE 25c All drugguits or Howard Rro., Buffalo. N. Y. , The only way to get something tot nothing la to start a fight about it Mr. Window' Sonthlnr Hmp. children teettiln? , iuftna Ilia puma, reduce la tiiniineuon. alluve Bain. cur XSeabutUa, Don't abuse the rich; we be paupers. BEL caul all PARKER'S HAIR BALSA i'Vj Jl hair ASSAYS f1 w,ifc Am.li 1 ( K ELIA II I'li UoM.ftr: (. Mvrr.fl.il fi"'S end Hiiver tltj mmlliia Mirk. ' C o., liwi Thompson nH. p Eye Water Children Like . GRAFT FOWL BONE ON JAW. I An unusual surgical operation waa performod a SL Joseph's hospital, in Omaha, recently. A por lion of the jawbone of I.ucretia Norris waa re moved and a piece of chicken bone inserted In tht place of a diseased section. The girl is six years old, and waa born with malformed jaw. It was to remedy this that a bom from a freshly killed chicken waa inserted. 1 CURE ' It i so pleasant to take-st- opa tin cough o quickly. Absolutely nil too and contains no A1 Dmita 28 CMtn. |